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South Korea Looks To Buy Second-Hand Missiles From Germany

Patriot PAC-3 missile in the clouds. Credit: Lockheed Martin.
by Staff Writers
Seoul (AFP) Sep 30, 2006
South Korea plans to buy second-hand Patriot missiles from Germany and some equipment from the United States to beef up its air defence capability, military authorities said Saturday. The Defence Acquisition Programme Administration (DAPA) has asked Germany and the United States to suggest terms for supplying Patriot missiles and related equipment, DAPA said.

The Patriots would replace South Korea's ageing ground-to-air Nike missiles, which were introduced 40 years ago.

"It would be the first Patriot missile system of our own," a DAPA official told AFP.

The United States, which has 29,500 troops stationed here, has eight batteries of Patriot missiles at four air bases throughout South Korea.

The South Korean military had planned to buy 48 Patriots from the United States in 2000, but the plan was scrapped because of a dispute over the cost.

The DAPA said it was seeking to buy an undisclosed number of second-hand Patriot missiles which are being put out of service in the course of the restructuring of the German armed forces.

It also wants ground control equipment for the systems from the United States.

A member of South Korea's National Assembly Defense Committee was quoted as telling Yonhap news agency that the new missile defense system was expected to be introduced as early as next year for deployment in 2008.

"I understand the new Patriot missile system would consist of a battalion-size unit," the legislator said, requesting anonymity.

A Patriot battalion is usually made up of three battery units, each of which carries eight missile launchers and a command center, according to military officials.

The announcement comes amid tensions over North Korea's firing of seven missiles in July in defiance of warnings from the international community.

Military experts say North Korea's missile development poses a major threat to regional security.

Source: Agence France-Presse

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Is Ballistic Missile Defense Worth The Money
Washington (UPI) Sep 28, 2006
America's missile defense programs are currently surging ahead far better than their critics expected. But at the same time, even if the programs deliver all the promise that their most ardent champions have predicted for them, they will still be able to deliver only a fraction of what the American public is being told by many pundits that they can do.







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